Posted on 07/19/2008 3:38:29 AM PDT by rellimpank
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For decades the Second Amendment might as well have been called the Second-Class Amendment. The U.S. Supreme Court spent the late 20th century expansively interpreting the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Eighth amendments, not to mention unenumerated rights ranging from travel to sexual privacy. But not until last month did the court hold that the Second Amendment means what it says: that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."
What took so long? I put the question to Alan Gura, the 37-year-old wunderkind lawyer who represented the plaintiffs in District of Columbia v. Heller.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
I cringed when I heard that, but I understand what he did. A lot of times appeals judges set traps for overreaching on arguments. On the same point, Gura's client was Heller, and he had to do what was best for Heller first or he's violating his fidiciary duty. Bob Levy also wanted a narrow ruling, strictly on the gun ban itself.
I thought he did a good job. I thought Dellinger did a good job arguing the case for the bad guys. The only one I thought did a real poor job was Solicitor General's office and Clement. Everyone was ripping him apart.
I don't think that's the issue. I think it more likely that Madison et al. would have feared that, without such language, the RKBA might be interpreted as only applying to a small subset of weapons, excluding some that would be necessary for effective military use.
You may be right, but don't forget one thing: it wasn't Lefty radicals like Hussein who first started placing "common sense" restrictions on the right to keep and bear. No, the first anti-gunners were "law and order" City Fathers (i.e the rich and famous), local police agencies and "right-wing" judges - all representing the interests of the wealthy- who feared what Old West desperados, Sacco and Vanzetti-type Anarchists and (later still) the Bolsheviks and Prohibition-era gangsters would do if they had ready access to firearms. I think that the Masters of the Plantation and the Captains of Commerce and Industry would have been much less apprehensive about militarily effective arms in the hands of an organized Militia than they would have been about a coach gun or a pocket pistol in the hands of a slave or an angry underling.
What do you mean "right-wing" judges? The terms have shifted meaning over the years. When power was dominated by private monied interests, authoritarians favored letting them keep their money while those seeking to tear down the existing power structure sought redistribution. Since redistributionists have gained power, now they want to bolster the government power structure and reinforce their positions.
In neither case would I expect the founders have been too pleased with authoritarian attempts at disarmament.
The first gun laws were intensely racist in nature. They were designed primarily to keep firearms out of the hands of newly freed Negroes.
You have that right.
You cannot defend a right when your argument defends limits on that right.
The gun haters are taking things like the machine gun laws and running with it. They see it as the right to bear arms side once again compromising.
The Heller case should have been argued on the fact that any gun control law infringes on the right to bear arms.
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